Zongming Pan
Stony Brook University
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Featured researches published by Zongming Pan.
Circulation Research | 2004
Irina A. Potapova; Alexei N. Plotnikov; Zhongju Lu; Peter Danilo; Virginijus Valiunas; Jihong Qu; Sergey V. Doronin; Joan Zuckerman; Iryna N. Shlapakova; Junyuan Gao; Zongming Pan; Alan J. Herron; Richard B. Robinson; Peter R. Brink; Michael R. Rosen; Ira S. Cohen
Abstract— We tested the ability of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) to deliver a biological pacemaker to the heart. hMSCs transfected with a cardiac pacemaker gene, mHCN2, by electroporation expressed high levels of Cs+-sensitive current (31.1±3.8 pA/pF at −150 mV) activating in the diastolic potential range with reversal potential of −37.5±1.0 mV, confirming the expressed current as If-like. The expressed current responded to isoproterenol with an 11-mV positive shift in activation. Acetylcholine had no direct effect, but in the presence of isoproterenol, shifted activation 15 mV negative. Transfected hMSCs influenced beating rate in vitro when plated onto a localized region of a coverslip and overlaid with neonatal rat ventricular myocytes. The coculture beating rate was 93±16 bpm when hMSCs were transfected with control plasmid (expressing only EGFP) and 161±4 bpm when hMSCs were expressing both EGFP+mHCN2 (P <0.05). We next injected 10 6 hMSCs transfected with either control plasmid or mHCN2 gene construct subepicardially in the canine left ventricular wall in situ. During sinus arrest, all control (EGFP) hearts had spontaneous rhythms (45±1 bpm, 2 of right-sided origin and 2 of left). In the EGFP+mHCN2 group, 5 of 6 animals developed spontaneous rhythms of left-sided origin (rate=61±5 bpm; P <0.05). Moreover, immunostaining of the injected regions demonstrated the presence of hMSCs forming gap junctions with adjacent myocytes. These findings demonstrate that genetically modified hMSCs can express functional HCN2 channels in vitro and in vivo, mimicking overexpression of HCN2 genes in cardiac myocytes, and represent a novel delivery system for pacemaker genes into the heart or other electrical syncytia.
Circulation | 2006
Annalisa Bucchi; Alexei N. Plotnikov; Iryna N. Shlapakova; Peter Danilo; Yelena Kryukova; Jihong Qu; Zhongju Lu; Huilin Liu; Zongming Pan; Irina A. Potapova; Bruce Ken Knight; Steven D. Girouard; Ira S. Cohen; Peter R. Brink; Richard B. Robinson; Michael R. Rosen
Background— Biological pacemakers (BPM) implanted in canine left bundle branch function competitively with electronic pacemakers (EPM). We hypothesized that BPM engineered with the use of mE324A mutant murine HCN2 (mHCN2) genes would improve function over mHCN2 and that BPM/EPM tandems confer advantage over either approach alone. Methods and Results— In cultured neonatal rat myocytes, activation midpoint was −46.9 mV in mE324A versus −66.1 mV in mHCN2 (P<0.05). mE324A manifested a positive shift of voltage dependence of gating kinetics of activation and deactivation compared with mHCN2 (P<0.05) in myocytes as well as Xenopus oocytes. In intact dogs in complete atrioventricular block, saline (control), mHCN2, or mE324A virus was injected into left bundle branch, and EPM were implanted (VVI 45 bpm). Twenty-four–hour ECGs were monitored for 14 days. With EPM discontinued, there was no difference in duration of overdrive suppression among groups. However, basal heart rates in controls were less than those in mHCN2, which did not differ from those in E324A (45 versus 57 versus 53 bpm; P<0.05). When spontaneous rate fell below 45 bpm, EPM intervened at that rate, triggering 83% of beats in control, contrasting (P<0.05) with 26% (mHCN2) and 36% (mE324A). On day 14, epinephrine (1 &mgr;g/kg per minute IV) induced a 50% heart rate increase in all mE324A, one third of mHCN2, and one fifth of control (P<0.05 mE324A versus control or mHCN2). Conclusions— mE324A induces faster, more positive pacemaker current activation than mHCN2 and stable, catecholamine-sensitive rhythms in situ that compete with EPM comparably but more catecholamine responsively than mHCN2. BPM/EPM tandems function reliably, reduce the number of EPM beats, and confer sympathetic responsiveness to the tandem.
The Journal of Physiology | 1998
Wenmei Shi; Hong-Sheng Wang; Zongming Pan; Randy S. Wymore; Ira S. Cohen; David McKinnon; Jane E. Dixon
1 Three new members of the EAG potassium channel gene family were identified in rat and the complete coding sequence of one of these genes (elk1) was determined by cDNA cloning. 2 The elk1 gene, when expressed in Xenopus oocytes, encodes a slowly activating and slowly deactivating potassium channel. 3 The elk1 gene is expressed in sympathetic ganglia and is also expressed in sciatic nerve. 4 Six of the seven known EAG genes were found to be expressed in rat sympathetic ganglia, suggesting an important functional role for these channels in the sympathetic nervous system.
The Journal of Physiology | 2001
Zongming Pan; A. A. Selyanko; J. K. Hadley; David A. Brown; Jane E. Dixon; David McKinnon
1 The region of alternative splicing in the KCNQ2 potassium channel gene was determined by RNase protection analysis of KCNQ2 mRNA transcripts. 2 Systematic analysis of KCNQ2 alternative splice variant expression in rat superior cervical ganglia revealed multiple variant isoforms. 3 One class of KCNQ2 splice variants, those that contained exon 15a, was found to have significantly different kinetics to those of the other isoforms. These transcripts encoded channel subunits that, when co‐expressed with the KCNQ3 subunit, activated and deactivated approximately 2.5 times more slowly than other isoforms. Deletion of exon 15a in these isoforms produced a reversion to the faster kinetics. 4 Comparison of the kinetic properties of the cloned channel splice variants with those of the native M‐current suggests that alternative splicing of the KCNQ2 gene may contribute to the variation in M‐current kinetics seen in vivo.
Science | 1998
Hong-Sheng Wang; Zongming Pan; Wenmei Shi; Barry S. Brown; Randy S. Wymore; Ira S. Cohen; Jane E. Dixon; David McKinnon
Circulation Research | 1999
Wenmei Shi; Randy S. Wymore; Han-Gang Yu; Jiying Wu; Rigel T. Wymore; Zongming Pan; Richard B. Robinson; Jane E. Dixon; David McKinnon; Ira S. Cohen
Circulation Research | 2001
Han-Gang Yu; Jiying Wu; I. Potapova; R. T. Wymore; B. Holmes; J. Zuckerman; Zongming Pan; H. Wang; Wenmei Shi; Richard B. Robinson; M. R. El-Maghrabi; W. Benjamin; Jane E. Dixon; David McKinnon; Ira S. Cohen; Rigel T. Wymore
The Journal of Neuroscience | 1997
Wenmei Shi; Randy S. Wymore; Hong-Sheng Wang; Zongming Pan; Ira S. Cohen; David McKinnon; Jane E. Dixon
Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2004
Han-Gang Yu; Zhongju Lu; Zongming Pan; Ira S. Cohen
Archive | 1999
Wenmei Shi; Randy S. Wymore; Hangang Yu; Jiying Wu; Rigel T. Wymore; Zongming Pan; Richard B. Robinson; Jane E. Dixon; David McKinnon; Ira S. Cohen